Thanksgiving Day

The President's Proclamation.

The following is President Roosevelt's proclamation appointing Thursday, November 26, as the annual day of thanksgiving and prayer,—

The season is at hand when, according to the custom of our people, it falls upon the President to appoint a day of praise and thanksgiving to God.

During the last year the Lord has dealt bountifully with us, giving us peace at home and abroad, and the chance for our citizens to work for their welfare unhindered by war, famine, or plague. It behooves us not only to rejoice greatly because of what has been given us, but to accept it with a solemn sense of responsibility, realizing that under heaven it rests with us ourselves to show that we are worthy to use aright what has thus been entrusted to our care. In no other place and at no other time has the experiment of government of the people, by the people, for the people, been tried on so vast a scale as here in our own country in the opening years of the twentieth century. Failure would not only be a dreadful thing for us, but a dreadful thing for all mankind, because it would mean loss of hope for all who believe in the power and the righteousness of liberty.

Therefore, in thanking God for the mercies extended to us in the past, we beseech Him that He may not withhold them in the future, and that our hearts may be roused to war steadfastly for good and against all the forces of evil, public and private. We pray for strength and light, so that in the coming years we may with cleanliness, fearlessness, and wisdom do our allotted work on the earth in such manner as to show that we are not altogether unworthy of the blessings we have received.

Now, therefore, I Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, do hereby designate as a day of general thanksgiving Thursday, the 26th of the coming November, and do recommend that throughout the land people cease from their wonted occupations, and in their several homes and places of worship render thanks unto Almighty God for His manifold mercies.

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.

Done at the city of Washington this 31st day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and three, and of the independence of the United States the one hundred and twenty-eighth. Theodore Roosevelt.

By the President.

John Hay, Secretary of State.

In keeping with the above proclamation of the Chief Executive of the United States, the usual Thanksgiving Day service will be held in the Mother Church, Boston, Mass., and in the Branch Churches throughout the country. As a church and people we have unnumbered and especial occasions for joining "with the spirit ... and with the understanding," in a devout and sincere commemoration of a service whose suggestive memories are sacred to every patriot and every Christian citizen. The "Thanksgiving Lesson" will be found on page 41 of the current issue of the Christian Science Quarterly.

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From a Lecturer's Note-book
November 14, 1903
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